MEMORIAL: Arnie Roma holds a memorial plaque taken from the new home of Anderson Cooper.Ron Romano

There’ll be little room for history in Anderson Cooper’s new home.

Before he bought his century-old firehouse in Greenwich Village, bronze plaques honoring members of Fire Patrol 2 who died in the line of duty — including on 9/11 — were stripped from the building to make it easier to sell.

The plaques were rescued from a pile of trash by Arnie Roma, whose son, Keith, a member of the fire patrol that worked out of the building, died on Sept. 11, 2001, rescuing people from the World Trade Center. A plaque in his son’s honor graced the firehouse’s facade.

Roma said he got a call last week from the Board of Fire Underwriters, the insurance-funded group that sponsored the patrol before it was shuttered in 2006, letting him know where he could find the plaques.

“If you want, come up here and get them because we don’t know what to do with them,” Roma said he was told by the insurance group. “They were laying in a corner with dust and garbage all around them.”

The four plaques that once hung at the firehouse had been pulled down and removed by the building’s former owners, fearful that the presence of the historic plaques might have made Cooper reluctant to buy the building, Roma said.

The board sold the firehouse to Cooper for $4.3 million late last year. The CNN newsman is now renovating it into a home.